Specter Defects to Democrats

Seventy-nine years old and in the Senate for five terms, Arlen Specter has decided to take the plunge and make it official: after years of claiming Republican affiliation, he has become a full-fledged Democrat.

Constituents also had been voicing their displeasure with Specter about his vote on the stimulus package, which he has defended as being necessary “to lessen the risk of a far more serious recession than we are now experiencing,” standard administration rhetoric.

The move brings the Obama administration and the Democrats closer to the much-coveted 60-vote majority, which could eliminate any Republican filibustering in the Senate so perhaps there is more to the move than meets the eye.

For his part, Specter, who is described by Democrats as a moderate Republican, is saying that the Republican Party has moved so far to the right — a claim hotly contended by many — that he is the one who has been abandoned: “I now find my political philosophy more in line with Democrats than Republicans.” It is quite easy to ascertain from Specter’s voting record, however, that he was no more a Republican than he was a Libertarian. At least, he was not a traditional Republican.

But with Steve Schmidt’s (he ran John McCain’s campaign) comment suggesting the Republican Party needs to have a more open-arms policy, and be more welcoming of gays and immigrants (meaning illegal immigrants), this could hardly be the real issue behind Specter's defection.